Bail set for two Weymouth home invasion suspects; two others held without bail

A judge has ordered two men who prosecutors say brandished handguns during a Weymouth home invasion held without bail after ruling that they would pose a danger to the public if released. The judge set bail for two others at $5,000 cash.

QUINCY – A judge has ordered two men who prosecutors say brandished handguns during a Weymouth home invasion held without bail after ruling that they would pose a danger to the public if released.

Judge Diane Moriarty ordered Hewnal A. Faulk, 19, of 4 Walker St. and Markus I. Souza, 19, of 26 Garofalo Road, both of Weymouth, held without bail Tuesday, a spokesman for the Norfolk County district attorney’s office said.

Moriarty also found two other men charged in the Feb. 23 home invasion on Rosalind Road – Justin R. Belfiore, 20, of 6102 Avalon Drive, Weymouth, and Decari L. Allengeter, 20, of 2305 Francis Ave., Mansfield – to be dangerous, but set bail for each of them at $5,000 cash. If they make bail, they will have to observe an 8 p.m. curfew, not possess firearms, stay away from each other and the alleged victims, wear GPS monitoring devices and not consume alcohol or use drugs.

All four men are charged with three counts of home invasion, armed robbery while masked and intimidation to steal from a depository. They are due back in court April 4.

Police say a 41-year-old woman, her 9-year-old son and a 20-year-old woman were inside the North Weymouth home when five men barged in at about 11:50 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 23.

The victims told police that a man whom officers later identified as Souza pointed a gun at the older woman and at one point clicked the safety off, according to a police report. They also said a man whom police later identified as Faulk kicked the younger woman in the stomach, put a gun to her head and demanded the combination to a safe that turned out to be unlocked.

The men stole several ounces of marijuana and some cash from the safe, which belonged to the older woman’s 20-year-old son, who was not home at the time, according to the report.

Faulk, Belfiore and Allengeter were arrested at their homes Feb. 26. Attorneys representing them at their arraignment Feb. 27 argued that police had arrested the wrong men and questioned the witnesses’ identification of their clients.

Souza turned himself in to police Sunday.

Police have not yet determined the identity of the fifth man who entered the home.

Christian Schiavone may be reached at cschiavone@ledger.com. Follow him on Twitter @CSchiavo_Ledger.